Diaz's grand slam powers Rangers past Tigers

Jun 6, 2007 - 5:31 AM
ARLINGTON, Texas (Ticker) -- One inning was enough to help the
Texas Rangers end their woes at home.

Victor Diaz belted a grand slam in a six-run first inning to
lead the Rangers to a 7-4 victory over the Detroit Tigers.

Michael Young went 4-for-4 and drove in a run for the Rangers,
who snapped a five-game losing streak at home and won for just
the third time in 13 games.

"This is a good team although we haven't played like it," Texas
outfielder Marlon Byrd said. "We have to take the opportunity
we've been given here to put some kind of a run together."

The Rangers also received stellar work from their bullpen after
starter John Rheinecker lasted just three-plus innings in his
season debut.

A trio of relievers combined on five innings of scoreless relief
before Eric Gagne worked around a two-out walk in the ninth for
his fifth save, ending the Tigers' two-game winning streak.

"We've been behind so much this year that it's been hard to get
our game-closing guys enough work," Rangers catcher Gerald Laird
said. "Eyre looked unbelievable tonight and (Joaqun) Benoit
came in and kept us in the game after a tough outing on Sunday
in Seattle.

"We've just got to put ourselves in a position to get (Akinori)
Otsuka and Gagne the ball more often."

Willie Eyre (2-2) worked two innings for the victory. He
allowed two hits and struck out one batter.

"Eyre's really meant a lot to this team especially when your
starting pitchers can't get you five or six innings," Rangers
manager Ron Washington said. "He's been a savior but hopefully
the starting rotation will get itself together and start getting
us to at least the sixth inning."

The Rangers rocked Tigers starter Nate Robertson (4-6), who did
not record an out and was gone after facing just six batters in
suffering his third straight loss.

Robertson had been awful of late, going 1-4 with a 7.01 ERA in
his previous five starts. This had been one of his favorite
venues, as Robertson entered with a 3-0 career mark and 1.71 ERA
at Texas.

Instead, he quickly loaded the bases in the first on a single
and consecutive walks.

Sammy Sosa brought in the first run with a single and Diaz
followed by belting a grand slam for an early 5-0 lead. That
gave Diaz six hits, including three homers, and 11 RBI in his
last 10 at-bats.

Robertson yielded a triple to the next batter, Byrd, and was
removed in favor of Jason Grilli, who gave up a sacrifice fly to
Ian Kinsler for an early 6-0 cushion.

"I must be honest and admit that I wanted more at that point,"
Washington said. "That's a good hitting team we were playing
and I wanted to put up as many as I could and then their relief
corps came in a shut us down until the ninth."

The final line for Robertson: six runs, four hits and two walks.
It was the first time the Rangers had knocked a pitcher from
the game in the first inning without retiring a batter since
1989.

"I felt pretty strong going in tonight," Roberston said.
"There's nothing hindering me physically. This is easily just
the worst stretch I've been through in the big leagues. I'm not
getting them to swing and miss. They're just fouling off
pitches and fouling off pitches."

The Tigers came right back against lefthander Rheinecker in the
second inning.

Detroit strung together four consecutive singles to open the
inning, with Brandon Inge driving in the first run. Gary
Sheffield walked to plate the second run and Magglio Ordonez cut
the deficit in half with a sacrifice fly to make it 6-3.

Inge belted a leadoff homer in the fourth before Rheinecker
walked Omar Infante and hit Placido Polanco with a pitch, which
prompted Washington to call for Eyre.

"When the game got to 6-4 in the fourth and Rheinecker had two
men on the bases, I didn't want to let the game get away from
us," Washington said. "It was Eyre, Benoit, Gagne and Aki
(Otsuka) that kept this one from getting away."

Rheinecker was charged with four runs and seven hits in
three-plus innings. He walked four and struck out one.

Texas added an insurance run in the eighth off Fernando Rodney
when Young singled home Kinsler for a 7-4 lead.